Collegehumor

Adam Ruins Everything explains why healthcare is expensive in the US and practically anywhere else that has medical insurance. Hospitals jacked up their prices so that insurance companies get “discounts”, i.e. the original prices. Check out the show’s sources here.

Adam Ruins Everything kicks off its second season by debunking myths about babies and pregnancy. Like how it’s actually perfectly fine and highly probable for a woman to get pregnant in her late 30s. Check out his sources here.

(PG-13: Language) “Good god, you’re still watching The Walking Dead! That isn’t even essential viewing!”CollegeHumor pokes fun at one of the most time-consuming rituals of adult life: watching TV shows so you can remain cool and up-to-date.

(PG-13: Language) “…don’t worry. You’re not gonna be audited. Because come on. Audited? You? No. “ It’s almost time for one of the great adult rituals: filing taxes. It’s complicated, depressing and archaic. CollegeHumor is here to make things worse.

Adam Ruins Everything digs a little deeper into the obvious – that free online services sell our data to advertisers. On one hand, targeted ads sustain the free stuff we enjoy (like this website). On the other hand, we don’t know just how much of our data is kept and by whom.

Can marijuana impair your thinking? Of course it can. But so can alcohol, yet beer is served in stadiums and weed is sold in parking lots because of – wait for it – politics and racism. Adam Ruins Everything traces Western society’s devolving outlook on the herb.

(PG-13: Language) “At Omni, we care more about putting other apps out of business than we do about making a good, simple, useful app.”CollegeHumor pokes fun at bloated apps and services that keep adding functions in a bid to lock us in to their ecosystem.

We all know someone like the sad clown in this twisted CollegeHumor sketch. You know, the dark soul who insists on only posting somber and heartbreaking stuff on their Facebook feed? Dude, they make anti-depressants for this sort of thing.

Most sunglasses and even prescription glasses are manufactured, sold and even prescribed by people who work for just one company – Luxottica. As one would expect from a near-monopoly, Luxottica jacks up prices and stifles or outright buys out its competitors.

After ruining engagement rings, Adam Conover continues railing against the romance industry. American weddings used to be a simple home affair, but now they’re displays of wealth perpetuated by intense and manufactured social pressure.

(PG-13: Language)CollegeHumor’s requisite bashing of the headphone jack-less iPhone 7 features Tim Cook having a nervous breakdown, and Jony Ive revealing himself to be what we suspected he was all along: a cold-blooded AI.

Adam Ruins Everything washes out a seemingly harmless piece of advice: drinking 2L or eight glasses of water a day. It turns out no study has conclusively proven that standard. So why are we often told to stay hydrated? Because money.

(PG-13: Language) Thanks to years of research and the Internet, we’re now aware more than ever of the myriad benefits of buying locally-grown produce. But thanks to laziness, that awareness barely translates into anything fruitful.

(PG-13: Language)CollegeHumor got the inside scoop on what critics, filmmakers and every other human being is saying about Leonardo DiCaprio. But if this is true, then what the heck is Jackie Chan after? What about everyone in Human Centipede?

“Just to give you an idea how hard these guys were punching, sometimes a punch didn’t even land, and the head flew back anyway.”CollegeHumor imagines how ESPN’s documentary series would treat Rocky Balboa’s fight against Ivan Drago.

Adam Ruins Everything talks about the U.S. Electoral College. It was intended to give less populous states a voice and avoid problems should states support regional candidates. But it ended up being an undemocratic mess where a citizen’s vote hardly matters.

“Who is Al, and why is he spending time with a baseball team instead of helping starving children?”CollegeHumor and actor Neal McDonough parody ESPN’s documentary series to look back on a silly kids’ movie with an oddly star-studded cast.

(Crude humor) “Facebook. Okay to drink expired milk? Facebook.”CollegeHumor’s skit returns to put up a mirror on the dumb, creepy and outright lazy things we do with Google, and what would happen if the search engine disappeared.

(PG-13 Language) While the 2015 envisioned 30 years ago in Back to the Future Part II was a sort of commercial utopia, filled with magical Hoverboards and self-lacing Nikes, here’s what we got instead. Thanks, CollegeHumor.

…not that it was great to begin with. This clip from professional cynic Adam Conover’s spinoff TV show Adam Ruins Everything reminds us that the TSA is actually the STA – the Security Theater of America. Seriously, you guys are paying to be lied to and harassed.

(PG-13: Language)CollegeHumor roasts the expensive restaurants that don’t bother to explain their convoluted menus, and the people who go there despite knowing what’s in store for them just so they can feel fancy for a night.

(PG-13 Language)CollegeHumor asked YouTube commenters to make a story one line at a time. The result is a surprisingly semi-coherent tale about a man named Fistwolf – er, John Cena, and his historic marriage.

…aka Square’s checklist. We grew up with JRPGs, but as CollegeHumor points out we could do without a lot of their tropes, from the convoluted storyline to the final boss. Also, we heard a rumor that monsters are coming back.

Capt. Picard and the NCC-1701-D fight Darth Vader and the Death Star in a battle to determine who’s dorkier. Is it the jargon-spewing slumber party or the cult of rave toys? All we know is we wish there was a Star Riker show.